Scouting report: Arizona Wildcats vs. UCLA Bruins
- Bruce Pascoe Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
The Star's Bruce Pascoe previews all of the game day essentials, from projected starting lineups to storylines and series history, before the Arizona Wildcats wrap up their Los Angeles trip at Pauley Pavilion.
Game info
Updated
Arizona's Ira Lee goes face-to-face against USC's Victor Uyaelunmo for a bucket in the second half of their Pac-12 game at the Galen Center, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily StarWho:Β Arizona Wildcats (14-6, 5-2) at UCLA Bruins (10-9, 3-3)
Where:Β Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles
When:Β 8 p.m. Saturday
Watch:Β ESPN2
Listen:Β 1290-AM, 107.5-FM
Follow:Β @TheWildcasterΒ on Twitter /Β TheWildcasterΒ on Facebook
Probable starters: Arizona
Updated
G Justin Coleman (5-10 senior)
G Brandon Williams (6-2 freshman)
F Brandon Randolph (6-6 sophomore)
F Dylan Smith (6-5 junior)
C Ryan Luther (6-9 senior)
Probable starters: UCLA
Updated
G Jaylen Hands (6-3 sophomore)
G Prince Ali (6-4 junior)
F Kris Wilkes (6-8 sophomore)
F Jalen Hill (6-10 freshman)
C Moses Brown (7-1 freshman)
How they match up
Updated
UCLA interim coach Murry Bartow, right, calls to his team in the closing seconds of regulation against Oregon in an NCAA college basketball game in Eugene, Oregon.
Chris Pietsch / AP PhotoSeries history
Arizona and UCLA have split their past 14 matchups, including two played last season. The teams didnβt meet in Los Angeles but UCLA beat Arizona 84-74 at McKale Center, when the Bruins shot 51.6 percent and put all five starters into double figures, while the Wildcats pulled out a 78-67 overtime win in the Pac-12 Tournament semifinals, when Deandre Ayton had 32 points and 14 rebounds. UCLA leads the series all-time 56-44.
This season
The Wildcats will not host UCLA at McKale Center this season because of the Pac-12βs unbalanced schedule.
UCLA overview
Picked to finish second in the Pac-12, UCLA lost five of its eight final nonconference games and fired coach Steve Alford on New Yearβs Eve. While the Bruins won their first three Pac-12 games under interim head coach Murry Bartow, they have since lost at Oregon State, at USC and at home to ASU.
The Bruinsβ season was compromised before it even started, with former UA commit Shareef OβNeal (heart) and well-regarded point guard Tyger Campbells (ACL) lost in the preseason, but still have arguably the Pac-12βs most talented overall rotation.
Without Campbell, the Bruins have been forced to rely on speedy combo guard Jaylen Hands. He pushes what is the Pac-12βs fastest pace and leads the conference in assists at 6.3 per game and has a 2-1 assist-turnover ratio in all games. However, the Bruins are woefully inefficient offensively, with the leagueβs highest turnover rate (21.7 percent) in conference game and just 32.4 percent shooting inside the arc.
When theyβre on offensively, though, the Bruins get driving and outside shooting from wing Kris Wilkes, along with more shooting from guard Prince Ali and combo guard help from David Singleton off the bench. Inside, the Bruins rotate their considerable size and mobility, counting 6-9 Cody Riley, 6-10 Jalen Hill and 7-1 Moses Brown, the five-star center from New York. Remarkably athletic for his size, Brown has the third-highest offensive rebounding rate in the country, collecting missed shots 17.4 percent of the time heβs on the floor. Heβs also an 65.3 percent shooter inside.
He said it
UpdatedβJaylen Hands has a much different and bigger role than he did last year. I think Kris Wilkes is one of the best players in our conference, if not the country. There arenβt many players theyβll score on us in transition. They play the fastest tempo of any team weβve payed and have so many different guys who are good in transition. Thatβs what they do. And obviously turnovers, bad shots that ignites that.
"If we can have another single-digit turnover night that would be really, really important. And theyβre a capable offensive rebounding team. They have size, athleticism and depth. They can really hurt you with second shots and thatβs a concern with us right now.β
β UA coach Sean Miller
Key player: Jaylen Hands
Updated
UCLA guard Jaylen Hands, a one-time UA recruiting target, is lightning-quick and averages 12 points and 6.2 assists per game for the Bruins.
Marcio Jose Sanchez / The Associated PressUCLA
Wing Kris Wilkes might be the Bruinsβ most talented player, but things start with the lightning-quick Hands, a one-time UA recruiting target. Hands not only averages 12.0 points a game but he gets the assist 37 percent of the time when his teammates score when heβs on the floor, the 15th highest assist rate nationally.
Key player: Ryan Luther
Updated
Arizona forward Ryan Luther drives into the paint against USC's Nick Rakocevic in their Pac-12 game at the Galen Center, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily StarArizona
With Chase Jeter expected to be out or limited against UCLA, Luther will be the Wildcatsβ biggest hope against another sizable lineup. USCβs two bigs combined for 39 points and 24 rebounds on Thursday, while Luther was 4 of 10 from the floor. Heβll likely have to do more if UA has a chance Saturday.
Not a perfect 10
Updated
UCLA center Moses Brown dunks against Arizona State during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019, in Los Angeles.
Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP PhotoThe fact that UCLA fired its coach in midseason and is carrying a 10-9 record into Saturdayβs game are only two indications that things are a little rough in Westwood these days.
Hereβs another: Just 7,555 fans showed up on Thursday to watch the Bruins lose at ASU, three days after 10,270 showed up to watch UCLA beat the Sun Devils β¦ in gymnastics.
βItβs a gymnastics school, now,β said the first sentence in the L.A. Timesβ basketball game story.
Meanwhile, a Times column stated that βthe Bruins were a mess when they fired Steve Alford on New Yearβs Eve, and they remain a mess now.β
Then again, like with everybody in the beaten-down Pac-12, thereβs always hope.
βWe think weβre capable of beating anybody in the league and if we donβt play well, anybody can beat us,β interim head coach Murry Bartow said.
Kittens
Updated
USC forward Bennie Boatwright stretches over Arizona's Dylan Smith for a rebound in the second half of their Pac-12 game at the Galen Center, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily StarUA coach Sean Miller said his Chase Jeter-less lineup Thursday against USC was the smallest heβs ever started in his 15 years as a head coach, the first five of which were at Xavier.
He started the 5-10 Justin Coleman, 6-2 Brandon Williams, 6-5 Dylan Smith, 6-6 Brandon Randolph and 6-9 Ryan Luther, with the 6-7 Ira Lee coming off the bench.
But his 2011-12 starting lineup was actually only an inch taller collectively, though it had more sizeΒ Β with two 6-3 point guards (Josiah Turner and Jordin Mayes).
That season, Miller went with either Mayes or the oft-suspended Turner at the point, 6-2 Nick Johnson and 6-3 Kyle Fogg on the wings, with 6-6 Solomon Hill and 6-7 Jesse Perry inside.
Often that season, which ended in the first round of the NIT, Miller referred to the Wildcatsβ shortcomings up front as βdeath by inches.β
Inside knowledge
Updated
Arizona head coach Sean Miller talks to Ira Lee, left, and Dylan Smith during a timeout late against USC at the Galen Center, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily StarMiller said Friday that itβs been difficult to scout Pac-12 teamsβ offenses so far because most of them are playing against zone defenses, while the Wildcats run a man-to-man.
But no opposing coach probably knows more about the Bruins individually than Miller does.
He tried to recruit roughly half of entire starting rotation, including guard Jaylen Hands, forward Cody Riley, forward Jalen Hill, center Isaiah Brown and backup guard David Singleton.
βAll those guys,β Miller said.
Miller, of course, also actually had a commitment from sidelined UCLA freshman Shareef OβNeal before he flipped to the Bruins once ESPN reported in Feb. 2018 that Miller had discussed a pay-for-play scheme.
Numbers game
Updated
Arizona guard Justin Coleman splits the defense on a drive to the lane against USC at the Galen Center, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star1
Active player Arizona has over 6-7 when Chase Jeter is missing.
8
Players UCLA has who stand at least 6-8, counting the sidelined Shareef OβNeal.
44.5
Arizonaβs two-point percentage in seven Pac-12 games, the second-worst mark in the league.
57.4
UCLAβs free-throw percentage over six Pac-12 games, worst in the conference.
Tags
More information
- Greg Hansen: Unbalanced schedule, down year for Arizona and UCLA typify Pac-12 struggles
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